Help: it's sure a stupid error, but I can't find it
Hi, I have that in the fstab file: /dev/hda1 /windows/C ntfs auto,users,exec,rw,umask=000,uid=myuser,gid=users 0 0 /dev/hda5 /windows/D ntfs auto,users,exec,rw,umask=000,uid=myuser,gid=users 0 0 and those are the permissions of /windows/C and /windows/D : dr-xr-xr-x 1 myuser users 12288 2004-10-17 13:38 C dr-xr-xr-x 1 myuser users 4096 2004-10-15 19:00 D When I tried to do some writing operation (copy a file), from Konsole for example, I get an error: file system is only read.... Any idea? Thanks in advance. Regards. ______________________________________________ Renovamos el Correo Yahoo!: ¡100 MB GRATIS! Nuevos servicios, más seguridad http://correo.yahoo.es
On Friday 22 October 2004 09:55 pm, Hug wrote:
Hi,
I have that in the fstab file:
/dev/hda1 /windows/C ntfs auto,users,exec,rw,umask=000,uid=myuser,gid=users 0 0 /dev/hda5 /windows/D ntfs auto,users,exec,rw,umask=000,uid=myuser,gid=users 0 0
and those are the permissions of /windows/C and /windows/D : dr-xr-xr-x 1 myuser users 12288 2004-10-17 13:38 C dr-xr-xr-x 1 myuser users 4096 2004-10-15 19:00 D
When I tried to do some writing operation (copy a file), from Konsole for example, I get an error: file system is only read....
Any idea?
Thanks in advance.
Regards.
Which version of SuSE are you using where you expected to have Write capability to NTFS? I wasn't aware the had ever released that. -- _____________________________________ John Andersen
On Fri, 2004-10-22 at 22:17 -0800, John Andersen wrote:
Which version of SuSE are you using where you expected to have Write capability to NTFS? I wasn't aware or the had ever released that.
You can enable write support for ntfs in later kernels and recompile, but. from what I can gather, its pretty dangerous and you're liable to lose data. Hence the default is read-only. If you want to share files between Linux and Windows (on ntfs), create a small FAT partition and copy the appropriate files across. David -- Registered Linux User No 207521 The Linux Counter: http://counter.li.org/ "The above is my personal opinion and does not necessarily reflect that of the little voices in my head."
On Friday 22 October 2004 10:55 pm, David Robertson wrote:
On Fri, 2004-10-22 at 22:17 -0800, John Andersen wrote:
Which version of SuSE are you using where you expected to have Write capability to NTFS? I wasn't aware or the had ever released that.
You can enable write support for ntfs in later kernels and recompile, but. from what I can gather, its pretty dangerous and you're liable to lose data. Hence the default is read-only. If you want to share files between Linux and Windows (on ntfs), create a small FAT partition and copy the appropriate files across.
David --
Thats my understanding too. -- _____________________________________ John Andersen
Hi Does anyone know how to make in suse 9.1 PHP pages actually function i have installed every known php module that are on the disks but still i can only download php pages and apache2 does not seem to support php. Is it therefore true that IIS ,due to new developments on apache2, is superior to apache2 Greetings Peter
On Saturday 23 October 2004 10:06, peter wrote:
Hi Does anyone know how to make in suse 9.1 PHP pages actually function i have installed every known php module that are on the disks but still i can only download php pages and apache2 does not seem to support php. Is it therefore true that IIS ,due to new developments on apache2, is superior to apache2 Greetings Peter
Are the php pages somewhere where the apache server can see them? eg, your public_html directory? If they are then you can call them using http://your-server-name/~your-user-name/page.php
On Saturday 23 October 2004 1:06 am, peter wrote:
Hi Does anyone know how to make in suse 9.1 PHP pages actually function i have installed every known php module that are on the disks but still i can only download php pages and apache2 does not seem to support php. Is it therefore true that IIS ,due to new developments on apache2, is superior to apache2 Greetings Peter
Works out of the box here. No problems, so you must have something misconfigured somewhere. Scott -- POPFile, the OpenSource EMail Classifier http://popfile.sourceforge.net/ Linux 2.6.5-7.111-default x86_64
You're rigth.
I've never use NTFS partitions, until I have to
install XP, and I did not anything abuot that
characeristic.
Thanks.
--- John Andersen
On Friday 22 October 2004 10:55 pm, David Robertson wrote:
On Fri, 2004-10-22 at 22:17 -0800, John Andersen wrote:
Which version of SuSE are you using where you expected to have Write capability to NTFS? I wasn't aware or the had ever released that.
You can enable write support for ntfs in later kernels and recompile, but. from what I can gather, its pretty dangerous and you're liable to lose data. Hence the default is read-only. If you want to share files between Linux and Windows (on ntfs), create a small FAT partition and copy the appropriate files across.
David --
Thats my understanding too.
-- _____________________________________ John Andersen
ATTACHMENT part 2 application/pgp-signature
______________________________________________ Renovamos el Correo Yahoo!: ¡100 MB GRATIS! Nuevos servicios, más seguridad http://correo.yahoo.es
It's clear.
Thanks a lot.
--- David Robertson
On Fri, 2004-10-22 at 22:17 -0800, John Andersen wrote:
Which version of SuSE are you using where you expected to have Write capability to NTFS? I wasn't aware or the had ever released that.
You can enable write support for ntfs in later kernels and recompile, but. from what I can gather, its pretty dangerous and you're liable to lose data. Hence the default is read-only. If you want to share files between Linux and Windows (on ntfs), create a small FAT partition and copy the appropriate files across.
David -- Registered Linux User No 207521 The Linux Counter: http://counter.li.org/
"The above is my personal opinion and does not necessarily reflect that of the little voices in my head."
-- Check the headers for your unsubscription address For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the archives at http://lists.suse.com Please read the FAQs: suse-linux-e-faq@suse.com
______________________________________________ Renovamos el Correo Yahoo!: ¡100 MB GRATIS! Nuevos servicios, más seguridad http://correo.yahoo.es
Hi,
On Sat, 23 Oct 2004 09:55:16 +0300
David Robertson
On Fri, 2004-10-22 at 22:17 -0800, John Andersen wrote:
Which version of SuSE are you using where you expected to have Write capability to NTFS? I wasn't aware or the had ever released that.
You can enable write support for ntfs in later kernels and recompile, but. from what I can gather, its pretty dangerous and you're liable to lose data. Hence the default is read-only. If you want to share files between Linux and Windows (on ntfs), create a small FAT partition and copy the appropriate files across.
Or use "Captive": http://www.jankratochvil.net/project/captive/ (This is just for the info since I haven't tried it myself - no NTFS partitions to experiment here :) -- - E - on SUSE 9.1 | blackbox 0.65 | copperwalls was here ;) "The righteous themselves will possess the earth, And they will reside forever upon it." - Psalms 37:29
On Saturday 23 October 2004 1:25 pm, - Edwin - wrote:
You can enable write support for ntfs in later kernels and recompile, but. from what I can gather, its pretty dangerous and you're liable to lose data. Hence the default is read-only. If you want to share files between Linux and Windows (on ntfs), create a small FAT partition and copy the appropriate files across.
Or use "Captive": http://www.jankratochvil.net/project/captive/
(This is just for the info since I haven't tried it myself - no NTFS partitions to experiment here :)
From the Captive webpage: Known Issue Captive was written to interface with the Linux kernel via LUFS. Unfortunately, this project is no longer being maintained by its author. Mounting of NTFS devices usually works, but is no longer supported by the author of Captive. A port of Captive to the newer FUSE interface has not yet been implemented. There is an experimental LUFS-FUSE bridge called lufis that can be used in the meanwhile. Also, the captive-cmdline(1) interface will get around any kernel compatibility problems. --- Sounds to me like a fine edifice built on a foundation of sand. At least they're honest about it. Paul
participants (8)
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- Edwin -
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David Robertson
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Hug
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John Andersen
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Paul W. Abrahams
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peter
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Scott Leighton
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steve-ss